Southern Baptist Convention President Bart Barber released a lengthy statement Oct. 30 explaining how he gave the final go-ahead for the SBC Executive Committee to sign on to a hotly contested amicus brief related to a sexual abuse case in Kentucky.
“This is my doing. I approved it. I take full responsibility for the SBC’s having joined this brief,” Barber stated. Barber, pastor of First Baptist Church in Farmersville, noted the brief was signed Aug. 9, 2022.
“I did not give this decision to file this brief the level of consideration that it deserved. Some of the most important information affecting my decision was information I failed to seek,” he explained.
“Knowing what I know now, I know that I should have asked more questions. I should have taken the opportunity to request a meeting between the Interim CEO, myself, and our legal counsel to gather more information.
“I did not have the power to decide then, but I did have the opportunity to advise. I failed to use that opportunity wisely, and I regret that. Our future decisions likewise lie with the SBC Executive Committee. I hope to do a better job of using my voice to influence those decisions going forward.”
Also joining the brief were Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., and Lifeway Christian Resources. Questions remain about which entity brought the brief to the other two entities’ attention and the full reasoning behind the decision to move forward in this manner.
Lifeway has not yet released a statement.
Southern Seminary released the following statement attributed to President Al Mohler, two days after the Louisville Courier Journal reported on the legal brief: “As is often the case in questions of law, significant constitutional and legal questions arise and require arguments to be made before courts. In such cases we must refer all questions to legal counsel. We respect the rule of law and must work through the process with legal representation, who must speak for us in this case.”
In Barber’s statement, he explains what all was taking place the day he signed the brief, which was the day after he announced the members of the SBC Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force.
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“I spent that day trying to support everyone on the Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force and to carry forward our work. August 9, 2022, was not a day I spent trying to hurt survivors,” he said.
“That’s what makes it hurt so much, and that’s what makes me so disappointed in myself: I did, in fact, wind up hurting survivors by what I did.”
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